The Courtroom Video That Exposed a Family’s $3 Million Lie-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Courtroom Video That Exposed a Family’s $3 Million Lie-nhu9999

The courtroom smelled like polished wood, burnt coffee, and lemon cleaner.

Genevieve Lancaster noticed that before she noticed anything else.

Not because it mattered.

Image

Because when your own parents drag you into court and demand your home, your mind reaches for small things to hold on to.

The smell of cleaner.

The hum of the fluorescent lights.

The stiff grain of the wooden table under your palms.

Across the aisle, Beatrice Lancaster held a tissue to her face.

Genevieve’s mother dabbed at the corners of her eyes with delicate precision, as if grief had a choreography and she had rehearsed it in the bathroom mirror.

There were no tears.

There never were, not when the pain belonged to someone else.

Beside Beatrice, Genevieve’s father sat with his back straight and his mouth pressed into a disappointed line.

Arthur Lancaster had always believed disappointment was a form of authority.

If he sounded wounded enough, people were supposed to step aside.

If he looked stern enough, facts were supposed to feel rude.

Penelope sat on the other side of him, scrolling through her phone.

She was twenty-five, dressed in ripped designer jeans, polished boots, and a jacket Genevieve recognized from a boutique she had once walked past and not entered because she had been saving for closing costs.

Penelope looked bored.

That hurt less than it should have.

By then, Genevieve had trained herself not to expect shame from her sister.

Still, seeing Penelope scroll through furniture websites while a judge considered whether Genevieve should lose her home made something cold press behind Genevieve’s ribs.

My furniture, she thought.

My windows.

My balcony.

My life.

The penthouse was on the eighteenth floor of a luxury building in Capitol Hill.

It had floor-to-ceiling windows, marble counters, a quiet office with a view she had once only seen in other people’s lives, and a balcony that looked out over Elliott Bay.

Genevieve had bought it with six years of saved bonuses, brutal hours, secondhand furniture, skipped vacations, and a fear of poverty that never really left her.

The down payment had been $640,000.

Every dollar had come from her.

Not from her parents.

Not from Penelope.

Not from some imaginary family fund that had never existed for Genevieve in the first place.

When she was little, Penelope got the master bedroom with the bay window.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *